I’ve worked at The Home Depot as a sales associate for almost 10 years now.* It’s the longest I have ever stayed at one job, ever. My normal m.o. prior to HD is, after about three years, I get bored in a job and I go looking elsewhere. So, what broke the cycle?
To be honest, I like working for the Depot. I never thought I’d like retail, and while some days it’s torture, I honestly like being able to help people find what they’re looking for and finish home projects. I think I’m pretty good at it, too.
Of course, a major factor is simply the fact that I have a wife and kid now, and I basically need the stability that having a full-time gig provides, such as a weekly paycheck and benefits. And, since I made the decision not to be a teacher (both a tough and not-so-tough decision, emotionally and spiritually), I’m certainly not going to begrudge a career in retail, especially at one of the largest and most successful home improvement retail chains in the world.
But sticking around almost 10 years at the same workplace, with no thoughts of leaving, doesn’t come about simply due to a steady paycheck. I wouldn’t have stayed that long at a job that I thought of in terms of “meh, it’s an okay job.”
There’s something about working at the Depot that makes me want to stay, and, not only stay, but eventually work my way up the ladder of the company.
It’s what co-owners Bernie Marcus and Arthur Blank refer to as the “culture” of the Home Depot. Somewhat hard to describe but nevertheless present and tangible to anyone who works there for a long enough period of time, this “culture” embodies both a sense of familial belonging and a sincere living of hard-core values.
There’s nothing schmaltzy or cheesy about it. It’s not a touchy-feely love-fest. There are, of course, some days that I want to strangle some of my managers and co-workers. There are some days that I want to say “fuck you” to a customer so badly that I salivate at the thought. Some days, I would love to call in sick... while I’m working the floor.
Then again, maybe that’s exactly why the Home Depot feels like a family. I love my family, but they drive me crazy, and I sometimes dread having to spend time with them.
“Built From Scratch”, written in 1999, is Marcus/Blank’s business memoir/credo.
They fashion themselves two “regular guys” who took an idea and built a home improvement retail empire that is worth billions today out of nothing. This is slightly disingenuous, because it makes them sound like two poor schlemiels who, by sheer luck, “fell into” the home improvement business.
In truth, both guys were fairly successful businessmen prior to teaming up to open the first Home Depot. They built up a lot of equity of knowledge, experience, and business acumen in several successful (and some not-so-successful) companies prior to the Depot. They probably failed more times than they succeeded, but what made them outliers was that “x-factor” of never getting down or giving up.
Still, the story of the Home Depot’s origin is a pretty fascinating one. From a business perspective, it is probably a gold standard by which many new retail stores try to reach. Much like Sam Walton’s “Walmart” (the comparison is intentional, as Marcus/Blank both knew and respected Walton as a businessman), the Home Depot has continually shaped and altered the face of the retail industry and the “big box store” model.
“Built From Scratch” isn’t a book that I can recommend to just anybody. It’s not exactly pleasure reading, unless you have an MBA or actually read magazines like “Forbes” or “Money”, neither of which I have ever read.
To people like me, parts of the book will be boring and uninteresting. Anytime numbers are brought up, or phrases such as “stock options”, “IPOs”, and “leveraged buyouts” are used, my mind glazes over. It’s as exciting as watching grass grow or paint dry, in my opinion.
That said, “Built From Scratch” touches on the tangible (and some intangible) things that make the Depot unique in the business world.
Firstly, it’s the values: Marcus and Blank built their company on a few key concepts---taking care of customers, each other, and the community---that some companies may emulate and spout as dogma, but at the Depot, it never feels like the company is simply paying lip service to these ideas.
From day one, as an associate, it is pounded into you: take care of the customer. Treat them the way you would want to be treated if you were a customer. Sure, it’s the Golden Rule, corporate version, but it’s something that they actually believe. After a while, when you hear it enough, you are going to believe it, too.
Marcus/Blank were insane about making sure customers left the store happy. They recount several stories in which one or both of them would travel miles to another store (sometimes a competitor’s) to buy a product that a customer couldn’t find at their store. Some of their experiences were, in truth, nutso. But the point was made clear: give the customers what they want or, at least, let them know that you are working to get them what they want. From a practical business sense, a happy customer is a repeat customer.
Within the culture of the store, taking care of each other is just as important as taking care of customers. Happy employees are productive employees. Logical. But it’s more than logic, sometimes. It cultivates an atmosphere of mutual respect, compassion, and honest charity that, occasionally, seems lacking in the rest of the world.
Finally, community outreach: It sometimes sounds like a church, with the Depot’s “mission” to “give back” to the community and “build relationships”. Again, though, it never seems like lip service, as the results of the Depot’s good deeds are evident, whether it’s helping local Boy Scout troops build garden boxes and playground sets at local parks or sending supplies and manpower to places hit hard by natural disasters.
I hope I don’t sound like a cult member talking up its cult leaders because that’s far from the truth.
I don’t agree with everything the Home Depot does. As with most of corporate America, I have problems with the fundamental capitalistic infatuation with the bottom line. I know that, in most cases, profit is really the underlying motive behind everything that is done. I'm also well aware of the ridiculous amount of money that Marcus has given to the Republican Party and Trump's campaign personally. Frankly, the thought disgusts me.
But somedays, when I don’t come to work grumpy, when I don’t have to deal with annoying customers, and when I actually get along with my managers (these are extremely rare days, mind you), I actually enjoy walking the aisles, laughing with co-workers over coffee, and helping customers out. And sometimes that actually feels like enough.
*9/1/2025 addendum: I'm still here. I've been at my Home Depot for 15 years now, 16 in March of 2026. I still like my job, too.